Thanks Dave. Is the breaker building in any way like a stamp mill or is the 
crushing done differently?

Thanks Rachel Covington



________________________________
 From: David Heine <[email protected]>
To: [email protected] 
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 6:30 PM
Subject: RE: {S-Scale List} Re: S tuff for sale 2
 

  
Rachel,
 
In the case of Mt. Union, the last facility was a Chance flotation plant.  The 
coal the EBT brought there was mine run, which meant it was all different sizes 
and had some rock mixed in with the coal since it was straight out of the 
mine.  The plant crushed the coal and mixed it with water.  Using cyclones, 
etc, the heavier sand/rock particles could be separated from the less dense 
coal.  Essentially washing the coal of impurities,  The coal was also graded by 
size.
 
There were other methods, using boys to separate the rock and coal by hand, for 
example.  This why you see a large breaker building at many coal mines, it is a 
place to prepare the coal coming out of the mine for its intended use.  
 
Dave Heine
Easton, PA
 
 
From:[email protected] [mailto:[email protected]] On Behalf Of 
Rachel Covington
Sent: Thursday, June 28, 2012 6:21 PM
To: [email protected]
Subject: Re: {S-Scale List} Re: S tuff for sale 2
 



Please forgive my ignorance but what is a coal washing facility? I don't really 
know that much about the coal industry in the first place and the only thing I 
can think of is that
rinses off the highly flammable coal dust to make it safer for shipping. Is 
this anywhere near a correct guess?
 
Thanks, Rachel Covington
 

________________________________

 
 



 

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